BOSTON — Two men are accusing late Red Sox clubhouse manager Donald Fitzpatrick of sexual assault in 1991 and are seeking $5 million each in damages.

The men informed Sox executives of their demands last week, The Boston Globe reported.

Fitzpatrick was accused of molesting at least nine boys when he was the Sox clubhouse manager between 1971 and 1991. He died at the age of 76 in 2005 while serving a 10-year prison sentence.

All of the incidents happened at the Sox spring training facility in Florida, but one of the two men who has come forward now, Charles Crawford, claims Fitzpatrick assaulted him in 1991 inside a Fenway Park restroom.

It is the first time Fitzpatrick is accused of assaulting boys inside the Red Sox clubhouse.

The Red Sox paid out $3.15 million in 2003 to settle with seven Florida men who claimed Fitzpatrick molested them during spring training, while Fitzpatrick pleaded guilty to attempted sexual battery, the report said.

Attorney Mitchell Garabedian, who represents Crawford and the second man in the new allegations, scheduled a news conference for Monday morning.

“The Red Sox have always viewed the actions of Mr. Fitzpatrick to be abhorrent,” he said in a statement reported by the Globe. “When the team, then under a previous ownership group, became aware of the allegations against Mr. Fitzpatrick in 1991, he was promptly relieved of his duties.”

But Goldberg added, “The club is unaware of any specifics regarding the matters brought forward recently by two individuals.”